This week in search and tech, we’re seeing big shifts shaping both SEO strategies and the broader digital landscape. The August 2025 Spam Update continues to roll out, and its effects are being felt across the SEO community—sites relying on thin, programmatic, or duplicate content are taking hits, while those prioritizing originality and user value are showing stronger resilience.
At the same time, Danny Sullivan’s keynote at WordCamp US reinforced Google’s commitment to the open web and reminded us that “good SEO is good GEO.”
Add to that a historic U.S. antitrust ruling, a major privacy verdict against Google, and new product updates—from Circle to Search’s continuous translation to Apple’s AI-powered Siri partnership with Google Gemini—and it’s clear we’re in a period of both disruption and opportunity.
The August 2025 Spam Update, which began on August 26, has already produced significant volatility in search rankings. Unlike some previous spam updates, the effects were visible within just 24 hours, with noticeable traffic and ranking shifts across multiple industries and site types.
What SEOs and Site Owners Are Seeing
Reactions from the SEO community show mixed experiences:
Tracking Tools Confirm the Shake-Up
Rank-tracking platforms such as Semrush, Accuranker, Advanced Web Rankings, and Wincher all show high volatility. This suggests that the update is broad in scope, affecting multiple verticals and languages worldwide.
Patterns Emerging
What This Means for Marketers and Webmasters
Danny Sullivan, now a Director within Google Search (no longer serving as the public-facing Search Liaison), delivered the opening keynote at WordCamp US 2025 on August 28. In his current role, he focuses on internal projects within the Search team.
You can watch the full keynote here: Danny Sullivan’s WordCamp US 2025 Keynote – How (and Why!) Google Search Keeps Evolving
Core Themes from the Talk
1. Google Still Depends on the Open Web
Sullivan emphasized that Google continues to rely heavily on the open web. While AI features like AI Overviews and AI Mode are expanding, they are designed to highlight and connect users to useful content, not replace publishers.
2. “Good SEO Is Good GEO”
Addressing the concept of Generative Engine Optimization (GEO), Sullivan explained that it isn’t a new discipline. Instead, GEO is simply SEO done well. Clear, original, people-first content remains the key to performing successfully across both traditional and AI-driven search experiences.
3. Content for Humans First
Sullivan urged creators to continue focusing on clarity, accessibility, and unique value. Thin, repetitive, or low-value content will continue to underperform, while genuinely helpful and original content will remain essential.
4. AI as Amplifier, Not Replacement
Sullivan made it clear that AI is meant to enhance—not replace—traditional search. Generative features work best when they can rely on trustworthy, structured, and transparent sources.
What This Means for SEOs and Content Creators
After years of legal battles, a U.S. federal judge has officially ruled that Google operates an illegal monopoly in search. While the court acknowledged Google’s dominance, it stopped short of ordering a breakup. This means Chrome and Android will remain under Google’s control, avoiding the more drastic remedies some critics had pushed for.
Key Changes
The ruling focuses on how Google maintains its market position. The judge banned exclusive distribution agreements that tied Google Search, Gemini, Assistant, and the Play Store together. However, payment-based default placements—such as Google paying Apple to remain Safari’s default search engine—are still permitted.
In addition, Google must now share parts of its search index and user interaction data with “qualified competitors.” This move is meant to lower the barrier for other players in the search space who historically lacked access to Google’s scale of data.
Related: Google Antitrust Ruling, Explained: What Happened and What Changes Now
Industry Reactions
Not everyone is impressed. Critics call the remedies too light, saying they won’t significantly curb Google’s power—some labeling it a “slap on the wrist.” Others note that the decision reflects today’s evolving landscape, where AI-driven search engines like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and others are already emerging as competitive threats.
Why It Matters for Marketers
In the short term, the ruling won’t cause major disruption. Google remains the dominant search engine, and its key products continue business as usual. But in the longer term, the requirement to share search index data could open doors for competitors, possibly creating new traffic channels and reshaping how search visibility works.
For SEO professionals, the main takeaway is to monitor the competitive landscape. As more companies gain access to search data, diversification beyond Google may become increasingly relevant in future strategies.
A federal jury in San Francisco has ordered Google to pay $425 million for violating user privacy. The class-action lawsuit alleged that between 2012 and 2020, Google continued collecting data from users even after they disabled the “Web & App Activity” tracking feature.
Scope of the Case
Legal Findings
Google’s Response
Google has already announced plans to appeal the decision, arguing that the ruling misinterprets how its products function. The company maintains that while personalization may be disabled, any data collection is pseudonymous, non-personal, encrypted, and anonymized.
Why It Matters
This ruling highlights the growing legal and regulatory scrutiny over how tech companies handle user data—even when users attempt to block tracking. The case comes at a time when Google is also under pressure from antitrust regulators, signaling a broader trend of accountability on multiple fronts.
Implications for Marketers & SEO
While the immediate impact of this ruling is centered on privacy, not search, it’s an important reminder that transparency and compliance with data protection standards are increasingly critical. Marketers should anticipate tighter rules on user tracking and ensure privacy-first practices are built into their digital strategies.
Launched in early 2024, Circle to Search allows Android users to search anything on their screen without switching apps. By circling, highlighting, or tapping text or images, users can instantly get search results in an overlay. It has become one of Google’s flagship AI-powered features on mobile devices.
The New “Scroll and Translate” Feature
Google has now added a continuous translation option to Circle to Search. This update is designed to make reading and interacting with foreign-language content much smoother. Instead of restarting translation for every new section of text, users can simply turn on “Scroll and Translate.”
Once activated:
This means menus, news articles, and even social media feeds in other languages can now be read with minimal interruption.
Why It Matters
The update addresses a common frustration: translations stopping when the screen content changes. By allowing translation to persist, Google reduces friction for multilingual browsing and makes Circle to Search more practical for everyday use.
For example:
Availability
The feature begins rolling out this week, starting with select Samsung Galaxy devices. More Android phones are expected to gain the capability in the coming months as Google continues expanding Circle to Search.
Part of a Larger Evolution
This update builds on Google’s broader efforts to make Circle to Search a multipurpose tool. Other improvements over the past year include:
With “Scroll and Translate,” Google is strengthening Circle to Search as both a search shortcut and a language accessibility tool.
Apple is planning a major AI-powered overhaul of Siri, internally called “World Knowledge Answers.” This upgrade is designed to make Siri far more capable, delivering context-aware responses that combine text, images, videos, and points of interest.
Google Gemini Joins the Scene
In a shift from Apple’s typical go-it-alone strategy, the company has struck a multi-billion-dollar deal with Google to integrate its Gemini AI model into Siri. The arrangement will allow a customized version of Gemini to run on Apple devices, potentially extending beyond Siri into features like Safari and Spotlight.
Why Apple is Pivoting
Apple has faced delays in rolling out its own large-scale AI tools, while competitors like OpenAI and Perplexity continue to advance rapidly. Partnering with Google provides a ready-made solution that still aligns with Apple’s focus on privacy and on-device intelligence. Apple is also continuing work on its in-house AI systems, codenamed Linwood and Glenwood, while keeping the door open for partnerships with other AI providers.
Timeline & Launch
The enhanced Siri experience is expected to roll out around 2026, alongside iOS 26.4 and the launch of the iPhone 17 series.
What It Means for Users & Marketers
As the dust settles, the key theme is consistency: Google is doubling down on people-first content, regulators are demanding accountability, and the AI race is pushing platforms to move faster than ever.
For SEOs and marketers, the takeaway is to stay steady—focus on clarity, originality, and credibility while the spam update shakes out. With AI integrations reshaping how users interact with search, and legal pressures reshaping how companies handle data, adaptability will be essential.
We’ll keep tracking these shifts closely and sharing the insights that matter most to your strategies.